Local Information

Jabajak is conveniently located in the heart of west Wales, making it absolutely ideal to pop out after breakfast to any of the Pembrokeshire, Carmarthenshire and Ceredigion attractions, gardens, historical buildings or coastal walks and be back in time for supper, ready to recharge your batteries for the following day.

Fishguard has a regular ferry link to Rosslare in Ireland and was the site of the last successful invasion of Britain, when a force of 1,400 French soldiers landed near Fishguard but surrendered two days later.

Pebbles and extraordinarily dark sand made of pounded grey slate form this rural beach. The same slate gives a brilliant deep blue colour to the water in the 'Blue Lagoon'; a beautiful little harbour - a breached quarry - just to the north of the beach.

This Welsh gentry estate contains the most complete example of the early work of John Nash. It has its own service courtyard with dairy, laundry, brewery and salting house, and walled kitchen gardens (with all its produce for sale when in season).

This island, accessible by regular boat trips has seas are full of fantastic wildlife, from delightfully coloured sea slugs to magnificent cetaceans. The island itself attracts a huge array of wildlife which shelters in its bays and inlets.

Wool was historically the most important and widespread of Wales's industries. Housed in the picturesque village of Dre-fach Felindre in the beautiful Teifi valley you can see a unique view of textiles in production, while the Textile Gallery displays aspects of the National Flat Textile Collection.